Search

    Language Settings
    Select Website Language

    GDPR Compliance

    We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, Privacy Policy, and Terms of Service.

    Maha Shivratri 2026: Know How To Prevent Acidity And Bloating While Fasting

    1 hour ago

    (By Dr. Ridhima Khamesra)

    Maha Shivratri fasting sounds simple on paper. Fruits, milk, sabudana, maybe a bowl of khichdi later. In reality, it’s one of the fastest ways people end up with acidity, bloating, and that heavy chest burn by evening. Not because fasting is wrong, but because the way most people fast goes completely against how digestion works.

    When food timing changes suddenly, the gut reacts. And if the food choices are all quick sugars and dairy, the reaction is louder.

    ALSO READ: Maha Shivratri 2026: Simple, Nutritious And Healthy Vrat Recipes To Try

    Why Acidity Hits Harder During Fasting

    The stomach doesn’t stop producing acid just because food intake pauses. Acid secretion follows a rhythm. When long gaps are created and then broken with fruit, milk, or fried vrat foods, acid has nothing solid to work on. That’s when burning, nausea, and reflux show up.

    Bloating comes from a different place. Large fruit bowls, bananas, sweet potatoes, sabudana, and peanuts are all gut-heavy foods. Individually they’re fine. Together, especially on an empty stomach, they ferment.

    So the problem isn’t fasting. It’s stacking the wrong foods at the wrong time.

    Start The Day Without Shocking The Gut

    Beginning the fast with only tea, coffee, or fruit is a mistake. A small protein or fat buffer makes a difference. A bowl of plain curd, a glass of diluted buttermilk, or even soaked almonds can calm acid production instead of triggering it.

    Raw fruit works better later in the day when digestion is already active. Early morning fruit on an empty stomach is a common acidity trigger.

    Choose Vrat Foods That Digest, Not Just 'Allowable'

    Sabudana khichdi, fried patties, and heavy potato preparations slow gastric emptying. That sluggish feeling after eating isn’t fullness. It’s delayed digestion.
    Better options are lightly cooked vegetables, lauki sabzi, steamed sweet potato, or thin vrat khichdi made with minimal ghee. Portion size matters more than variety. Mixing five vrat foods in one meal overloads the gut.

    Watch The Milk And Fruit Combination

    Milk, bananas, and dates are often consumed together during fasting. This combination sits heavy and produces gas. If milk is included, it’s better consumed alone, warm, and not immediately followed by fruit.

    Adding cardamom or dry ginger to milk helps reduce bloating.

    Don’t Break The Fast Aggressively

    After hours of restriction, overeating feels justified. That’s when acidity peaks. Breaking the fast with a light, warm meal allows acid levels to normalise before heavier foods come in.

    Eating slowly matters more on fasting days than on regular days.

    Maha Shivratri fasting doesn’t harm digestion. Sudden food gaps, sugar-heavy meals, and poor combinations do. When meals stay simple, warm, and spaced out, the gut stays calm. Fasting should feel light and steady, not like something the stomach has to recover from the next day.

    Dr. Ridhima Khamesra is a Clinical Dietician

    Disclaimer: The information provided in the article is shared by experts and is intended for general informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

    Click here to Read More
    Previous Article
    PAK कप्तान बोले-हैंडशेक न करने का जवाब मैच में देंगे:सूर्या ने कहा- 24 घंटे बाद देखेंगे, एशिया कप में हाथ नहीं मिलाया था
    Next Article
    IND vs PAK मैच के लिए कुछ भी करेगा... | T20 World Cup 2026 | Team India | #Cricket World Cup

    Related Health Updates:

    Are you sure? You want to delete this comment..! Remove Cancel

    Comments (0)

      Leave a comment